Knowing your own mate value: Sex-specific personality effects on the accuracy of expected mate choices
Knowing your own mate value: Sex-specific personality effects on the accuracy of expected mate choicesKnowing one's mate value (mate-value accuracy) is an important element in reproductive success. We investigated within-and between-sex differences in this ability in a real-life speed-dating event. A total of 190 men and 192 women filled out a personality questionnaire and participated in speed-dating sessions. Immediately after each date, participants recorded who they would choose as mates and who they expected would choose them. In line with evolutionarily informed hypotheses, results indicated that sociosexually unrestricted men and more agreeable women showed greater mate-value accuracy than sociosexually restricted men and less agreeable women, respectively. These results have important implications for understanding mating behavior and perhaps the origin of sex differences in personality.https://www.psych.uni-goettingen.de/de/biopers/publications_department/backetal2011https://www.psych.uni-goettingen.de/@@site-logo/university-of-goettingen-logo.svg
Mitja Back, Lars Penke, Stefan Schmukle and Jens Asendorpf
Knowing your own mate value: Sex-specific personality effects on the accuracy of expected mate choices
Psychological Science
Knowing one's mate value (mate-value accuracy) is an important element in reproductive success. We investigated within-and between-sex differences in this ability in a real-life speed-dating event. A total of 190 men and 192 women filled out a personality questionnaire and participated in speed-dating sessions. Immediately after each date, participants recorded who they would choose as mates and who they expected would choose them. In line with evolutionarily informed hypotheses, results indicated that sociosexually unrestricted men and more agreeable women showed greater mate-value accuracy than sociosexually restricted men and less agreeable women, respectively. These results have important implications for understanding mating behavior and perhaps the origin of sex differences in personality.